Difference between revisions of "Mendel Biotechnology"
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==Mendel Biotechnology== | ==Mendel Biotechnology== | ||
Jones is on the science advisory board of the [[Two Blades Foundation]].<ref>[http://www.2blades.org/sab.php#jj Science Advisory Board], Two Blades Foundation website, acc 7 Jul 2010</ref> His biography on the Two Blades Foundation website says: | Jones is on the science advisory board of the [[Two Blades Foundation]].<ref>[http://www.2blades.org/sab.php#jj Science Advisory Board], Two Blades Foundation website, acc 7 Jul 2010</ref> His biography on the Two Blades Foundation website says: | ||
− | :Dr. Jones has co-founded 2 companies; | + | :Dr. Jones has co-founded 2 companies; Mendel Biotechnology, founded in 1997 to carry out genomics experiments to discover and exploit key regulators of crop productivity, and [[Norfolk Plant Sciences]] Ltd, to combine health promoting traits and disease resistance traits in potato and tomato. Dr. Jones was elected a Professor at the [[University of East Anglia]] in 1997, a member of [[EMBO]] in 1998, and was elected Fellow of the [[Royal Society]] in 2003.<ref>[http://www.2blades.org/sab.php#jj Science Advisory Board], Two Blades Foundation website, acc 7 Jul 2010</ref> |
− | As well as being a co-founder of | + | As well as being a co-founder of Mendel Biotechnology, Jones is also on its advisory board.<ref>"[http://www.mendelbio.com/team/sab.html Scientific Advisory Board]", Mendel Biotechnology, accessed February 2009.</ref> [[Monsanto]] is an investor and collaborator in Mendel Biotechnology.<ref>"[http://www.bizjournals.com/stlouis/stories/2008/04/28/daily2.html Monsanto, Mendel Biotechnology sign deal]", St. Louis Business Journal, April 28 2008, accessed September 2009.</ref> Monsanto's vice president, biotechnology, [[Stephen Padgette]], is listed as being on the advisory board of Mendel Biotechnology in its Annual Report 2008.<ref>[http://www.mendelbio.com/newsevents/annual_report_2008.pdf Board of directors], Mendel Biotechnology Annual Report 2008, p 4, acc 8 Jul 2010</ref> |
As at July 2010, Mendel had been granted over 20 biotechnology and GM patents, as listed on its website.<ref>[http://www.mendelbio.com/newsevents/issuedpatents.php Issued patents], Mendel Biotechnology website, acc 8 July 2010</ref> Its interests include developing "energy grasses" for biomass and biofuels.<ref>[http://www.mendelbio.com/newsevents/annual_report_2008.pdf Mendel Biotechnology Annual Report 2008], p 4, acc 8 Jul 2010</ref> | As at July 2010, Mendel had been granted over 20 biotechnology and GM patents, as listed on its website.<ref>[http://www.mendelbio.com/newsevents/issuedpatents.php Issued patents], Mendel Biotechnology website, acc 8 July 2010</ref> Its interests include developing "energy grasses" for biomass and biofuels.<ref>[http://www.mendelbio.com/newsevents/annual_report_2008.pdf Mendel Biotechnology Annual Report 2008], p 4, acc 8 Jul 2010</ref> |
Revision as of 16:30, 8 July 2010
Mendel Biotechnology, Inc. is a biotechnology company that says it aims "to produce plants enhanced for food, feed, fiber, energy and aesthetic benefit without large increases in production acreage" and says it is
- dedicated to being a premier biotechnology company serving large agricultural companies with new genetic and chemical solutions and to becoming the leading seed company serving the bioenergy industry.[1]
Its interests include developing "energy grasses" for biomass and biofuels.[2]
Contents
Patents owned
As at July 2010, Mendel had been granted over 20 biotechnology and GM patents, as listed on its website.[3]
Collaborators: Monsanto, Bayer, BP
Mendel's collaboration with Monsanto goes back to 1997, the very year that Mendel was founded.[4][5]
Mendel's 2009 Annual Report names 2009 as a "watershed year", demonstrated by two collaborative partnerships: one with Monsanto and the other with Bayer CropScience.[6] On its website, Mendel also names BP as a strategic partner.[7]
Monsanto
On its website, the company names Monsanto as "Mendel's most important customer and collaborator for our technology business".[8]
In its 2008 Annual Report it lists two lines of business that were central to its growth in that year:
- a collaborative project with Monsanto on soybean yield, "the basis of which is a Mendel technology"[9]
- the establishment of "the first-ever field trials of genetically diverse Miscanthus varieties for biomass production in the United States"[10]
Mendel's deal with Monsanto involves Monsanto's "initial deployment of our [Mendel's] platforms" for its "improved yield soybean".[11]
Bayer
Mendel entered into collaboration with Bayer in early 2008.[12] The deal involves "developing chemical products which make crops more resistant to biotic and abiotic stress factors, which in turn will stabilize yields and improve crop productivity".[13]
Mendel says its program with Bayer "is a continuation of previous joint activities which focused on the elucidation of stress response mode of actions of Bayer agrochemicals like Imidacloprid and Trifloxystrobin".[14] Imidacloprid is one of a class of insecticides called neonicotinoids which have been banned in Germany due to a suspected role in the mass worldwide die-off of bees.[15] Mendel says, "The program aims to discover and develop further chemical products that regulate plant stress tolerance, leveraging Mendel's knowledge of plant transcription factor pathways with the expertise of Bayer CropScience as a leader in agricultural chemistry."[16] It is unclear from this whether Mendel is helping Bayer dig itself deeper into the neonicotinoid hole or trying to come up with less risky alternatives.
BP
According to Mendel's website:
- Mendel and BP entered into a strategic long-term collaboration in May 2007 for the development of a BioEnergy Seeds and Feedstocks business. The focus of the collaboration is the development and commercialization of seed products, both conventional and biotech varieties, for dedicated energy crops such as Miscanthus and switchgrass. This business is intended to serve the emerging 2nd generation biofuels industry both in the United States and abroad.
- Under the terms of the current agreement, Mendel owns the technology developed through the collaboration, Mendel owns and operates the seed and feedstock business, and BP receives royalties on seed sales.[17]
Mendel Biotechnology
Jones is on the science advisory board of the Two Blades Foundation.[18] His biography on the Two Blades Foundation website says:
- Dr. Jones has co-founded 2 companies; Mendel Biotechnology, founded in 1997 to carry out genomics experiments to discover and exploit key regulators of crop productivity, and Norfolk Plant Sciences Ltd, to combine health promoting traits and disease resistance traits in potato and tomato. Dr. Jones was elected a Professor at the University of East Anglia in 1997, a member of EMBO in 1998, and was elected Fellow of the Royal Society in 2003.[19]
As well as being a co-founder of Mendel Biotechnology, Jones is also on its advisory board.[20] Monsanto is an investor and collaborator in Mendel Biotechnology.[21] Monsanto's vice president, biotechnology, Stephen Padgette, is listed as being on the advisory board of Mendel Biotechnology in its Annual Report 2008.[22]
As at July 2010, Mendel had been granted over 20 biotechnology and GM patents, as listed on its website.[23] Its interests include developing "energy grasses" for biomass and biofuels.[24]
In its 2008 Annual Report it lists two lines of business that were central to its growth in that year:
- a collaborative project with Monsanto on soybean yield, "the basis of which is a Mendel technology"[25]
- the establishment of "the first-ever field trials of genetically diverse Miscanthus varieties for biomass production in the United States"[26]
Mendel's 2009 Annual Report names 2009 as a "watershed year", demonstrated by two collaborative partnerships: one with Monsanto and the other with Bayer CropScience.[27]
Mendel's deal with Monsanto involved Monsanto's "initial deployment of our [Mendel's] platforms" for its "improved yield soybean".[28]
Mendel's deal with Bayer involved "developing chemical products which make crops more resistant to biotic and abiotic stress factors, which in turn will stabilize yields and improve crop productivity".[29]
Mendel attempting to rescue low-yield Roundup Ready soy?
GM soybeans have given consistently lower yields than non-GM equivalents. Analysing multiple US field trials in 1999, agronomist Dr Charles Benbrook found an average yield drag of 5.3% for Roundup Ready soy. In some locations, the best conventional varieties beat RR yields by more than 10%.[30] Controlled comparative field trials of GM/non-GM soy suggested that 50% of the drop in yield was due to the genetic disruptive effect of the GM transformation process.[31]
In what was arguably a tacit recognition of this fact, in 2009 Monsanto launched its Roundup Ready 2 Yield soybeans, which it called "the first product we developed simply to increase crop yield". Monsanto said a new gene in RR2 soy would give "a 6-7 percent yield increase" in yield. When stacked with other aspects of RR2 technology, the total yield increase was predicted by Monsanto to reach 7-11%.[32]
Interestingly, the first figure of 6-7% yield gain is within the range of yield drag for first-generation RR soy quoted by agronomists in the above-mentioned studies. In other words, RR2 soy is hoped to compensate for the yield drag of RR1 soy, bringing yields all the way up... to that of conventional soy. The second figure of 7-11% would, at its higher end, slightly exceed the average yield of the non-GM soybeans that formed the controls in the yield studies mentioned above. That might justify to farmers the higher prices of GM soy seed, which have been the target of much criticism.[33]
Monsanto credits Mendel Biotechnology with discovering the magic gene that is meant to deliver these yield increases for its RR2 soybeans.[34] The chemicals company BASF is a second collaborator.[35]
However, just one year after the release of RR2 Yield soybeans, reports have emerged that they are not giving the promised higher yields. In July 2010 it was announced that West Virginia’s attorney general had launched a probe into Monsanto under consumer fraud laws over its claim that RR2 soybeans would give farmers higher yields.
According to a Bloomberg report, Monsanto last year began shifting growers to the new seeds by promising a 7 percent to 11 percent bigger harvest compared with the original Roundup Ready soybean seeds:
- Roundup Ready 2 soybeans were planted on 1.5 million acres last year and cost growers $74 an acre, 42 percent more than the older product, Bloomberg said.
- But according to West Virginia Attorney General Darrell V. McGraw, Iowa State University, Pennsylvania State University, a farmer group and investment researcher OTR Global found the latest seeds failed to deliver what Monsanto promised.
- Government surveys show the yield on soybean farms in West Virginia was 41 bushels an acre in 2009, the same as in 2008, the Journal said. McGraw offered Monsanto a chance to meet with state officials before he begins litigation.
- “My office is concerned that West Virginia farmers are paying much higher prices for soybeans with the Roundup Ready 2 trait when the yields do not live up to the claims and do not justify the increased prices,” McGraw wrote.[36]
In the face of this reported dismal failure of a Mendel/Monsanto GM technology, Jonathan Jones has published an article on the BBC website, hyping GM technology as a high-yield "solution" to the food and energy crises (see section, "Promoting GM on BBC website - vested interests undeclared").
Affiliations
As at June 2010, Mendel's "strategic partners" are:[37]
- Monsanto. Mendel calls Monsanto its "most important customer and collaborator for our technology business".[38]
- BP
- Bayer CropScience
- Selecta Klemm: a joint venture formed in 2006 — Ornamental Biosciences, Inc. — for the commercialization of ornamental crop varieties differentiated in the marketplace for improved growth and survival under a range of stresses.
- SweTree Technologies: a collaboration for the development of improved varieties of plantation forest tree species.
- ArborGen: a collaboration to improve stress tolerance in selected tree species.
People
As of July 2010:
- Neal Gutterson PhD - president and CEO[39]
Scientific advisory board
As of June 2010:[40]
- Dr. Elliot Meyerowitz
- Dr. Jonathan Jones
- Dr. Brian Staskawicz
- Dr. Fred Ausubel
- Dr. Ulrich Schirmer
- Dr. Andrew Millar
- Dr. Joseph R. Ecker
- Dr. Andrew H. Paterson
- Dr. Charles Wyman
Funding
Contact
As at July 2010:[41]
- Address: Mendel Biotechnology, 3935 Point Eden Way, Hayward, CA 94545
- Phone 510-264-0280
- Fax 510-264-0254
- http://www.Mendelbio.com
Resources
Notes
- ↑ Our mission, Mendel Biotechnology website, acc 9 Jun 2010
- ↑ Mendel Biotechnology Annual Report 2008, p 4, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Issued patents, Mendel Biotechnology website, acc 8 July 2010
- ↑ Strategic partners, Mendel Biotechnology website, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Our history, Mendel Biotechnology website, acc 8 July 2010
- ↑ Dear Shareholder, Mendel Biotechnology Annual Report 2009, p. 4, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Strategic partners, Mendel Biotechnology website, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Strategic partners, Mendel Biotechnology website, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Mendel Biotechnology Annual Report 2008, p 4, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Mendel Biotechnology Annual Report 2008, p 4, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Dear Shareholder, Mendel Biotechnology Annual Report 2009, p. 4, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Strategic partners, Mendel Biotechnology website, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Dear Shareholder, Mendel Biotechnology Annual Report 2009, p. 4, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Strategic partners, Mendel Biotechnology website, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Alison Benjamin, Pesticides: Germany bans chemicals linked to honeybee devastation, Guardian, 23 May 2008, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Strategic partners, Mendel Biotechnology website, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Strategic partners, Mendel Biotechnology website, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Science Advisory Board, Two Blades Foundation website, acc 7 Jul 2010
- ↑ Science Advisory Board, Two Blades Foundation website, acc 7 Jul 2010
- ↑ "Scientific Advisory Board", Mendel Biotechnology, accessed February 2009.
- ↑ "Monsanto, Mendel Biotechnology sign deal", St. Louis Business Journal, April 28 2008, accessed September 2009.
- ↑ Board of directors, Mendel Biotechnology Annual Report 2008, p 4, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Issued patents, Mendel Biotechnology website, acc 8 July 2010
- ↑ Mendel Biotechnology Annual Report 2008, p 4, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Mendel Biotechnology Annual Report 2008, p 4, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Mendel Biotechnology Annual Report 2008, p 4, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Dear Shareholder, Mendel Biotechnology Annual Report 2009, p. 4, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Dear Shareholder, Mendel Biotechnology Annual Report 2009, p. 4, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Dear Shareholder, Mendel Biotechnology Annual Report 2009, p. 4, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Evidence of the Magnitude and Consequences of the Roundup Ready Soybean Yield Drag from University-Based Varietal Trials in 1998. Benbrook C. Benbrook Consulting Services Sandpoint, Idaho. Ag BioTech InfoNet Technical Paper, Number 1, 13 Jul 1999.
- ↑ Glyphosate-resistant soyabean cultivar yields compared with sister lines. Elmore R.W. et al. Agronomy Journal, 93: 408-412, 2001
- ↑ K. Sauer, A Brighter Future for Soybean Growers, MonsantoToday.com website, Feb 20 2009, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ There are many articles on the web on the subject of high prices for RR soy seed. One example, dating back to 2004, is Karen McMahon, Roundup Ready seed prices increase, Farm Industry News, 31 Aug 2004, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ K. Sauer, A Brighter Future for Soybean Growers, MonsantoToday.com website, Feb 20 2009, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ K. Sauer, A Brighter Future for Soybean Growers, MonsantoToday.com website, Feb 20 2009, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Monsanto Faces West Virginia Probe Over Roundup Ready 2 Soybean Seed Claims, NewsInferno, 1 July 2010, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Strategic Partners, Mendel Biotechnology website, acc 9 Jun 2010
- ↑ Strategic Partners, Mendel Biotechnology website, acc 9 Jun 2010
- ↑ Mendel Biotechnology Annual Report 2009, acc 8 Jul 2010
- ↑ Scientific Advisory Board, Mendel Biotechnology website, acc 9 Jun 2010
- ↑ Mendel Biotechnology Annual Report 2009, acc 8 Jul 2010